Chapter 26

Chapter 264,677 wordsCompleted

After the initial beating, O’Brien resumes his interrogation, explaining the three stages of “reintegration”: learning, understanding, and acceptance, and declares that Winston is now entering the second stage. He asserts that the Party does not seek power for any higher purpose; power is the ultimate end, pure and self‑justified. O’Brien describes power as collective, requiring the dissolution of the individual, and introduces the notion of “collective solipsism” – that reality exists only within the Party‑controlled mind. He argues that the Party’s control over matter stems from its control of thought, dismissing physical laws as mutable and proclaiming that the Party can redefine astronomy or physics at will.

O’Brien then attempts to make Winston feel his physical defeat. He orders Winston to rise, removes Winston’s prison‑uniform, and makes him stand before a three‑sided mirror. Winston sees his own corpse‑like reflection: gaunt, covered in dirt, with severe ulcers, missing teeth, and severe muscle wasting. O’Brien pulls at Winston’s hair, extracts a tooth, and harshly comments on Winston’s weight loss, emaciation, and foul smell, repeatedly emphasizing how broken his body has become.

The dialogue turns philosophical. Winston argues that a civilization founded on fear and hatred is impossible and will collapse; O’Brien retorts that the Party creates human nature, that humanity is the Party, and that any “spirit” or “principle” that might oppose them will be crushed. Winston asks whether the Party believes in God; O’Brien replies that the Party’s power is the only god and that the world will be forever governed by the boot stamping on a human face.

Winston attempts to resist, claiming the Party will eventually fail; O’Brien rebuffs him, stating that Winston will not betray Julia because he has not stopped loving her, though he has confessed everything else. O’Brien tells Winston he will be shot eventually, but that his “cure” will come sooner or later. The chapter ends with O’Brien leaving Winston, still half‑naked, humbled, and fully aware of his physical and ideological defeat.